Arrr! See CONTENTS for links to the 125 chapters of The Monstaville Memoirs plus introductions, conclusions, postscripts and appendices. This treasure trove also includes a collection of articles offering further insights into the themes explored in the trilogy. Namely, managing suffering and conflict (dealing with hostile people if you are nervous, sensitive or shy) and learning not to react

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Monday, 13 January 2014

Monstaville Book II. Appendix X

Appendix X

Excerpt from an interview with Eric Phelps, 2 September 2008

“The most wicked men in the world are white. Therefore, this
is a war between white men, righteous white men versus wicked white men. And
the blacks can either side with this, submit to us and help us or they will
side without our oppressors as they are now.

I have been
called a racist. I’d like to define the term. There is such a thing as a
hateful racist. This is what we’re all familiar with. The Klu Klux Klan first
come into mind. The Nazis next come into mind. But we forget about the Nation
of Islam. Those are black, hateful racists and they don’t get any bad press for
the most part. The new Black Panther Party, they’re hateful racists. But hateful
racism always springs from an injustice done to that race by the race that they
hate.

So you have
the Klu Klux Klan arising as a result of the Northern Yankees coming down and
inciting the blacks to commit rape and murder to many thousands of white women.
So the white men of the South said, ‘Were not putting up with this. We’re going
after these carpet baggers, these Southern traders. We’re going after these
Yankees and we’re going after these savage blacks that are raping our women.
And I would have been in the first Klu Klux Klan. The first Klu Klux Klan
started in 1866 and it ended in 1869. Nathan Bedford Forrest was a nominal
Mason but he was not a practising Mason, just like George Washington…Nathan
Forrest was the greatest cavalryman of the Southern Confederacy. He refused to
watch the South be plundered by the Yankees and these white people forcing…with
the blacks.

So that’s
why you had the first Klu Klux Klan. It was dissolved in 1869 because Nathan
Bedford Forrest said it was too violent. And, so, he formerly did away with it.
Well, who picks it up? Albert Pike. [Note on the video: Albert Pike was a
high-ranking Freemason and a Southern Confederate General who, in the closing
days of the civil War, helped to start a ‘terror’ campaign against black
slaves].

That
filthy, rotten, Luciferian Protestant-murderer. Remember, he used Sioux Indians
to kill, what, 800 or so Lutheran Protestants up in Minnesota. He was convicted
for treason but was pardoned by President Johnson. Albert Pike should have been
put to death. And yet this is the very Albert Pike who has a statue in
Washington DC, in black Washington DC, where Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton,
those Freemasons, are not picketing the place and saying, ‘Let’s get rid of
this statue of Albert Pike in Washington DC. They ought to. I’d go right down
there with them. Let’s just get rid of it now1 but that abomination is down
there in Washington DC. He was a hater of black men. He was the most powerful
Freemason of the 19th Century in America. And he can do no wrong
because no one’s going to go after his filthy name.

So, that’s
your original Klu Klux Klan. But then the Klu Klux Klan was revived in 1950.
And why is it revived in 1950? Because the blacks of the South are attempting
to be used by the Jesuits in the North to vote against the white people of the
South. So, they’re trying to use the blacks against the whites of the South and
this is creating a racial conflict.

That’s
what’s coming in the future. What should have been done was this. And see Lincoln
said himself that white people and black people suffer when they live together.
He wrote this in 1863. I have the book. I have a Jefferson quote right here
that says that the white people and black people cannot live under the same
government, that they’re equally free. They can’t do it. And I have quoted from
there. It’s the second section of what was supposedly written on the Statue of
Liberty. I use this quote a lot. And I have it in my series, Averting the Race War. You may have
heard that. OK, on page 62, this is what Carl Putnam writes in his view, Race and Reason. The Yankee View. And
this was the president of Delta Airlines. And it was published in 1961. Here’s
what he writes on page 62:

‘On a
marble panel in the Jefferson Memorial in Washington is a fragment of one of
Jefferson’s sentences. As inscribed on the panel, the words are, ‘Nothing is
more certainly written in the Book of Fate than that these people, the Negroes,
are to be free.’ As written by Jefferson, there was no period after these
words. There was a semi-colon and the sentence continues: ‘nor is it less
certain that the two races equally free cannot live under the same government.’
That was omitted because the purpose of the Jesuits is to formerly and
forcefully amalgamate this country so as to bastardise and mongrelise the white
race so that the white race will never rise up again in revolt against the
power of the Jesuit Order. A…mongrelised race can’t do it. They have never done
it in history. The Jesuits know this because we have the Curse of Canaan.’”

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Born on 25 November 1965 and currently living in Yorkshire, England. I write songs and books and have a website that serves as a platform for my work as well as being an Ascension resource. The Treasure Chest displays all chapters of The Monstaville Memoirs trilogy as well as further insights from various sources relating to the themes of these books. The Powerlessness of Now reveals the many ways in which we have given our power away to the Establishment through its web of control.

“Someone asked, ‘Why is there suffering?’ [Meher] Baba gave this succinct reply: ‘Suffering is essential for the elimination of the ego, just as it was necessary for you to scrub and scrub in order to wash the stain from my coat.’" - Unkown.

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